ABSTRACT
This study examines the impact that switching to a single sales factor (SSF) formula for state corporate income tax apportionment has on local employment. Resolving previous conflicting work, I find that SSF increased employment only for locally based firms, resulting in economically insignificant aggregate employment gains. Beyond contributing to the policy debate, the study also introduces a new database that provides location-specific, establishment-level information for both public and privately owned firms.
2015
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